Click here for the Daily Orange's inclusive journalism fellowship applications for this year


UNIVERSITY POLITICS

SU tops annual fundraising goal by nearly $90,000

Alexandra Moreo | Senior Staff Photographer

A single donor, Daniel D’Aniello and his wife, Gayle, gave $20 million. They pledged $500,000 during the Boost the 'Cuse campaign.

Syracuse University exceeded its $150 million fundraising goal for Fiscal Year 2018 by nearly $90,000, the university announced this week.

Donations totaled $150,087,407, which was almost 20 percent more than the fundraising goal for Fiscal Year 2017, per a Monday SU News release.

The donations included gifts from individuals, foundations and organizations.

More than $24 million of total funds raised were earmarked for Invest Syracuse, a five-year, $100 million fundraising plan intended to improve the university’s academics and student experience. Invest Syracuse initiatives include student scholarships and a plan to hire 100 new faculty members.

Of the FY 2018 donations, a single $20 million came from alumnus and Navy veteran Daniel D’Aniello and his wife, Gayle. Their donation will help fund the National Veterans Resource Complex. The NVRC is expected to cost $62.5 million, so the D’Aniellos’ donation funds about a third of the total cost. The D’Aniellos’ donation was one of the single largest gifts in SU history.



Boost the ‘Cuse, SU’s first 24-hour fundraising campaign in October 2017, brought in more than $1.7 million in gifts from about 3,560 donors, exceeding its donor goal by 190 percent. D’Aniello pledged $500,000 during the Boost the ‘Cuse campaign.

SU received a 37 percent increase in single donations of more than $1 million, according to the release.

Some major donations include:

  • A $5.25 million gift from University Life Trustee Daniel Mezzalingua and his wife, Kathy, in support of undergraduate financial aid
  • $3.5 million from Kwang Tan to help fund renovations on Archbold Gymnasium
  • A $2.3 million donation from University Life Trustee John Riley and his wife, Diane, to create an endowed scholarship fund for a dual degree in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and the Martin J. Whitman School of Management
  • $2.28 million from University Life Trustee Bill Allyn and his wife, Penny, to partly fund the Bill and Penny Allyn Innovation Center at the College of Engineering and Computer Science

ch





Top Stories